Vegetarian Diet Rules
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Vegetarian Diet Rules in detail
The European Vegetarian Society has listed detailed rules, which must be complied to in order to obtain the label. These are reproduced below:
The following products are excluded from the use of the V-Label:
- Animal flesh (meat, fowl, fish, seafood).
- Ingredients derived from meat or bone-products (in soups, sauces or other preparations)
- Animal fats (except milk fat), frying fat or margarine containing fish-oil or similar products in cakes, pies, pasta, for frying or baking, for greasing baking-traws, tins, or any other manipulation.
- Gelatine, aspic, gelling agents of animal origin.
- Royal Jelly.
- Other products containing ingredients originating from slaughterhouse by-products.
- Battery eggs.
Specific ingredients:
- Cheese - Is usually manufactured with traditional rennet made with enzymes from calvesâ stomaches and is therefore not acceptable, whereas vegetarian cheeses manufactured with enzymes of vegetable origin or micro-organisms are acceptable.
- Fats & Oils - need to be of vegetable origin. Margarine needs to be checked. It may contain ingredients which may be derived from animal fat, vitamins A and E which may be stabilised with gelatine, or vitamin D, which may come from lanolin of slaughtered sheep â these ingredients are not acceptable.
- Honey - Is acceptable. But not acceptable for vegan products.
- Fruit Juices, Alcoholic beverages, vinegar - Need to be chequed. They may have been clarified with gelatine, egg-white (usually battery), isinglass (swim-bladders of sturgeon fish) or chitin (crushed lobster or crab shells) â not acceptable.
- Whey - Should only be used if derived from a vegetarian cheese making process which included microbial or plantbased rennet.
- Worcestershire Sauce Often contains anchovies, needs to be checked.
Additives
Need to be checked with regard to their possible animal origin.
And products with genetically modified ingredients are prohibited, too.